Introducing: 'Responding to the Difficult Questions'
Our Schools Now introduces a new series exploring tough questions encountered in anti-harassment sessions. With queries ranging from teachers’ responsibilities to perceptions of harassment, each post will address these challenges, reflecting on cultural impacts and the shared duty to foster safe environments for students.
CHARLOTTE HENSHAW MBE JOINS AS SPORTS CAMPAIGN AMBASSADOR
GB Paralympic Champion Charlotte Henshaw MBE joins Our Streets Now as the first ambassador of their new sports campaign. Driven to make sports safer and more inclusive, Charlotte is passionate about ensuring women can exercise free from harassment or intimidation.
Navigating Public Spaces Designed For Men
Public spaces often overlook women’s needs, from inadequate lighting to poorly planned transportation. This article explores how design choices make spaces less accessible and safe, particularly affecting women from lower-income backgrounds. Our Streets Now calls for intersectional, inclusive planning for truly public spaces.
Olympic Boxing “Controversy”: Misogyny and Gender Policing
The Olympics women’s boxing “controversy” downplays women’s strength - and the impact of domestic violence
The manufactured “controversy” around the Olympic women’s boxing dominated news cycles for days on end, and is still, despite repeated debunking, rumbling on. Boxers Imane Khelif and Lin Yu-ting, who have both competed in women’s boxing for years without issue, had their gender questioned following their controversial disqualification from an earlier boxing event by the discredited IBA.
Paris 2024: The First Gender Equal Olympics?
Paris 2024 features a historic 50-50 split in male and female athletes. Yet, true gender equality remains distant. Women face underpayment, a ban on hijabs, and persistent sexism. Despite progress, such as more female Olympic coaches, the sports world still grapples with significant gender-based barriers.
Abolitionist Futures' Gender-Based Violence Resource
With conviction rates for sexual violence described as ‘a lottery’ by the Victims Commissioner, survivors being subjected to ‘digital strip searches’ as part of investigations, and a disturbing number of police officers being convicted of sexual assault and domestic violence, it’s not surprising that many survivors do not trust the current system when it comes to addressing and ending gender-based violence.